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The Kodiak
Maritime Museum held its annual meeting last week, and Executive Director Toby
Sullivan said it was the largest turnout he's ever seen. About 50 people
gathered in the conference room at the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge Visitor
Center downtown for an update on the organization's finances and a slideshow by
Kodiak fisherman Bill Harrington, who escorted three yachts from here to Japan
this summer.
-- (Maritime 1 45 sec "These
fancy yachts ... went on to Osaka.")
The three
yachts stopped off on several of the islands on the Aleutian Chain, including
Atka, where they visited the site where a World War II bomber was forced to
crash land:
-- (Maritime 2 38 sec "Yeah,
that's a B-24 that ... it still looks good.")
Aldona
Kouremetis (core-met-iss) is the president of the board of the Kodiak Maritime
Museum. She said after the meeting that the organization is "doing great."
-- (Maritime 3 25 sec "Toby
Sullivan, our executive ... community has been super.")
The museum
would like to build a display for the 38-foot fishing vessel Thelma C, a
fishing boat built with disaster relief money following the 1964 Earthquake and
tsunami. Sullivan said it may be the last of its kind, and the museum hopes to
put the interpretive display somewhere near the downtown boat harbor, perhaps
near Oscar's Dock.
Kouremetis
said the museum's other big annual event, "Tastes and Tales of the Sea," will
be on May 1st:
-- (Maritime 4 20 sec "And
our speaker will be Timothy Smith ... a young boy.")
At last
week's annual meeting, board members Debra Davis and Robbie Hoedel (ho-dell) were
re-elected to three-year terms.
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